
Book 7 



I 




LET T E R 




MRS, 



, AND OTHER 
LOYAL WOMEN, 



TOUCHING THE MATTER OK 



CONTRIBUTIONS FOR THE ARMY, 



AND OTJTEB MATTERS CONNECTED WITH 
THE WAR. 



S. G. HOWE, 




BOSTON: 

TICKNOR & FIELDS, 
18 62. 




/ 



LETTER 



f/f 

MRS. , AND OTHER 



LOYAL WOMEN, 



TOUCHING THE MATTER OF 



CONTRIBUTIONS FOR THE ARMY, 




AND OTHER MATTERS CONNECTED WITH 
THE WAR. 



S? G. HOWE. 




BOSTON: 

TICKNOR & FIELDS, 

1862. 






i>l 



1 



U7 y > 



Boston, February 20, 1862. 

Dear Madam: — 

Letters come constantly from loyal and anxious 
women in all parts of New England, who ask 
questions so like those which you put to me, that 
I will try to answer them all together. 

Since the life, and more than the life, even the 
very honor, of our beloved country are in danger, 
every one who honestly believes he can strike a blow 
or speak a word in her behalf, ought to do so ; and 
I shall therefore use this occasion to say some things 
not called for by your questions, nor indeed directly 
touching the matter of contributions. I want the 
moral aid and influence of every one to press the 
adoption of a policy upon which, as I think, the 
honor and the safety of the Eepublic depend. 

Your first question is, How can we reconcile the 
semi-official statements constantly put forth that our 
army is in good health, with the accounts given by 
officers and privates in their letters of the great 
number of sick in every regiment and company'? 



They are to be reconciled by considering that 
health is a comparative term. Compared with Euro- 
pean armies in the field, ours is healthy; compared 
with the rebel army it is probably very healthy ; but 
compared with a half million of men at home, it is 
fearfully unhealthy. 

Having seen something abroad of the usual fright- 
ful mortality among soldiers in actual war, and read 
more ; and having seen too the manner in which our 
volunteers were hurried into the field, I believe that 
the mortality among them would have been vastly 
greater but for the existence of the Sanitary 
Commission. 

I believe this after giving due weight to the fact 
that certain officers sneer at the Commission ; and to 
the really important fact that the season has been 
uncommonly favorable. 

The United States Sanitary Commission, projected 
and animated by its able and energetic president; 
organized and directed by its wise and humane 
secretary, has indeed done a great work in the way of 
preventing disease ; the credit of which is due almost 
entirely to those officers, and to the zealous inspectors 
and assistants whom they have employed. 

But let us look a little more closely at this matter 
of army sickness and mortality. 

Most men take a lively interest in the money cost 
of war, and want to know all about that. The Treas- 
urer, therefore, hurries up his accounts ; he states 



how many dollars have been spent ; and how many 
more must be forthcoming ; and all the people read, 
and straightway conclude that they have counted 
the cost of the war. 

But alas ! the most costly item of war is human 
life ; and of this people take too little thought. 

There is, indeed, a beautiful and perfect system 
in the army, by which a minute account of every 
case of sickness and mortality, with its details, is 
sent up from every regiment to head-quarters ; so 
that it may be ascertained whether on a given day 
John Doe was sick or well ; whether he had the 
mumps or a fever ; how many days he was ill ; and 
whether he got well or died. The elements of the 
calculation are all there; and we might have as 
speedy a return of cost of the war in life, as in 
dollars. But the people do not press ; and the 
Medical Bureau being proverbially a slow, though 
sure coach, the returns will not come out until after 
the war is over. At least it has been so heretofore. 

Fortunately, however, the Sanitary Commission, 
not tied up by red tape, has sent out its inspectors, 
(earnest medical men, who look to prevention of 
disease,) into all parts of the field. These Inspectors 
after careful personal inspection of over three hundred 
regiments, have made over four hundred reports. 
Each report gives answer to some seventy-five ques- 
tions, prepared with a view to show the sanitary 
condition, and the mortality of the troops. 



6 



The vast amount of vital statistics contained 
in these reports has been carefully tabulated by 
E. B. Elliott, (a very able statistician in the employ 
of the Commission,) and is already published. 

They show that the constant rate of sickness in 
the army of the Potomac is sixty-three to one 
thousand men ; in the army of the West, one hun- 
dred and sixteen to one thousand men ; in Western 
Virginia, one hundred and sixty-two to one thousand 
men ! 

This means, in plain English, that more than sixty 
thousand of our soldiers are sick every day. True, 
every man who is reported unfit for duty is included 
in this return. He may have only a headache or 
a cold ; a cut or a sprain ; and may be on duty again 
to-morrow. But allowing that only one-third are 
really ill, you have more than twenty thousand sick 
soldiers ; and can answer, as well as I can, the ques- 
tion so constantly put, " What in the world can they 
do down there, with so many hospital clothes \ " 

But there is a fearful truth revealed by these 
stubborn statistics, which will shock our people when 
it is fully comprehended. There must of course be 
much sickness, and many deaths among six hundred 
thousand men, let them be where they may. It 
would be at about the rate of one in a hundred, 
yearly, if they were at home. But our soldiers in 
the army of the Potomac are dying at the rate of 
three and a half in a hundred yearly ; and in 



the army of the West at the rate of five in a 
hundred ! 

Try to conceive the awful truth told by these figures. 
Calculate the rate upon six hundred thousand men ; 
and look steadily at the product, not as some vague 
and abstract estimate, but as an awful fact. Ponder 
it all the more sadly, because it tells far more 
severely upon our misguided brethren of the South. 
Think of seventy-five stalwart young men from the 
North, laid out cold and stiff every day ! Think of 
over five hundred soldiers, in the very bud and 
blossom of manhood, dying every week ! Think of 
half a regiment of Union troops buried every seven 
days ! — twenty-seven whole regiments laid low in a 
year, not by the sword, but by disease ! 

Merciful Heaven ! it almost drives one mad, when 
with this fearful fact before his eyes, and the wail 
of mothers and sisters, of widows and orphans in his 
ears, he is told to. be patient and silent; and to 
hope, at least, that the Government will be drifted 
by events away from its serve-God-and-Mammon 
policy of saving the Union, and saving too the 
constitutional rights of that institution which is the 
accursed root of all our bitterness and sorrow, and 
the only cause of disunion ! 

Was ever such sacrilegious perversion of words'? 
Constitutional right to hold men in slavery! As 
though all the constitutions ever made, from that 
of Sodom down to ours, could create right out of 



8 

wrong, or hold back such fiery punishments of sin 
as are now raining down upon our devoted land 1 ? 
Republican slaveholders ! as though a man holding 
fellow-men as slaves, can be any more properly called 
a republican, than one habitually stealing can be 
called an honest man. 

Pardon this outburst; but I lose patience at the 
delay to strike a righteous and killing blow into 
the very stomach of this rebellion by proclaiming 
emancipation under the war power, and enforcing it 
as fast and as far as we can ; since every week's 
delay costs five hundred lives, and every month's 
two thousand ; to say nothing of the demoralization 
which is going on. 

The Athenians rejected a plan to destroy their 
enemies, because it required them to do wrong ; we 
reject a plan because it requires us to do right, and 
to destroy a wrong. 

War, bloody civil war, is direful, barbarous, and 
brutalizing ; and it can be justified and sanctified 
only by high religious and moral motives. Are we 
justified and sanctified in fighting as we do, slaying 
and destroying the young and thoughtless part of our 
people, and bequeathing countless evils upon our 
posterity, if it be only to avenge a supposed insult 
to a flag, or forcibly repair a broken political fact, or 
secure commercial advantages'? 

Answer ye bereaved mothers, ye mourning widows, 
are these things worth the blood of your sons and 



your husbands 1 And ye, over whose clear ones the 
demon of war hovers on black wings, and may 
soon clutch in his bloody claws, do you not ask a 
higher price for the dread sacrifice than gratified 
national pride, — and material national gain ? May 
you not ask for it the freedom of millions of slaves, 
and the blessings of coming generations \ 

Besides, our soldiers are the children of the nation, 
and the Government has no moral right to deny them 
the benefits of the highest mora! incentives it can place 
before them. We can raise their real wages more by 
giving them a noble task of freeing men from bondage, 
than by any amount of pay and bounty. 

More than this : we must raise the moral standard 
of our Avar if we would have our country come out 
of it with honor, instead of conquering by dint of 
greater numbers and greater strength. 

You next ask whether it is desirable to send any 
more supplies of clothing or extra comforts to soldiers 
in the field ? 

To this I answer, No ; on the contrary, it is most 
undesirable. 

Do not be led away from sound principles by the 
pressure of individual cases ; and do not be deceived 
by vague reports ; but look carefully at the system 
and the practice of supplying the army; and you 
will conclude that more harm than good will come 
of continuing this form of charity, the tendency of 
which is to demoralize our men in various ways. 
2 



10 

You speak of the stories which reach you about 
the abuses of the contributions sent by our loyal 
and noble women, and I am sorry to say that they 
are founded in truth. 

For the most part, in the early months of the 
war, the contributions for men in the field were 
faithfully applied. But it is certain that there were 
even then losses, and waste, and gross abuses of 
various kinds. These have greatly increased since. 

Some officers have been untrustworthy, and basely 
turned to their own profit what was meant for the 
men. Many soldiers who did not lack clothing, 
nevertheless claimed their share of the contributions 
which came from their towns, and then sold them 
for money, or bartered them with hucksters and 
camp-followers for pies, cakes or whiskey. 

Some such abuses must necessarily occur, in such a 
wide-spread and hasty distribution, even if it were 
conducted by business men, and upon some organized 
plan ; but how many more when the distribution is 
made by zealous persons who have neither habits of 
business, nor facilities for doing it, and who work 
without mutual understanding. The consequence has 
been that all sort of irregularities and abuses have 
taken place. Some regiments or companies being 
laden down with more clothing and extras than they 
can carry, while others have got nothing. 

A remark of mine made in a letter to Governor 
Andrew, last May, that no more extra stores should 



11 



be sent on, gave offence to many at the time. It 
was as follows: — 

" Besides these regular supplies, there is a variety of articles 
in the greatest abundance, intended for the personal comfort of 
the soldiers, made up and forwarded by families, friends and com- 
mittees in the several towns. It would be easy to mention some 
articles of which our four regiments have enough to supply forty 
thousand men during a whole campaign. Many of these things will 
have to be left behind when the troops go into the field. Their 
principal value (and that is priceless) is as a testimony of the patri- 
otism, zeal and generosity of the men and women who felt that they 
must do something for the cause which seemed to them, not only of 
their country, but of humanity. It may be well to say here that, in 
my opinion, no more extra stores should be sent on. They do not 
promote the real efficiency, or even comfort of the troops, and they 
do cause confusion, and even interfere with the regular service in 
various ways." 

Now see what one of our best surgeons says, eight 
months later, that is in January last : — 

" One word more. The friends of the soldiers who imagine their 
sons, brothers, wards or friends, as the case may be, as suffering for 
want of some of the good things and luxuries of life, put themselves 
to a great deal of trouble and expense to send to camp articles of 
food, as cheese, cake, pastry, etc., which are not only not necessary 
and do no good, but more frequently do positive injury. Whenever 
I see boxes containing such articles coming into camp, I calculate 
upon an increased number at surgeon's call next morning, and I 
have rarely miscalculated. However, I suppose such things must 
be. The expense of transportation is not a small consideration. I 
know of one instance in which a considerable quantity of cheese 
was sent to some members of the regiment. The exact cost of this 
cheese, including purchase and transportation, amounted to two 
dollars ($2.00) per pound. The money was misspent. The kind 
heart that meant well ought to be better instructed." 



12 



The Sanitary Commission early saw the confusion 
and the abuse ; and decided to do nothing more 
than to solicit and receive contributions of hospital 
clothing and stores ; and to give them out solely 
upon the written requisitions of the surgeons of the 
respective regiments. This has been adhered to in 
all cases I believe, except that of the temporary 
Hospital or Home for weary, or sick, or straggling 
soldiers in Washington. 

The Commission therefore, is not responsible for 
any of the abuses which have caused so much 
dissatisfaction and scandal. 

But my objections are to the whole system of 
contributions for men in the field. Whatever it may 
have been in the outset, it is now not only unwise, 
but it is harmful, and ought not to be continued. 

Never was an army so well paid ; and never was 
a large one so well fed, and so well clad. The Gov- 
ernment has now the means, and the organized 
method; and it is beyond a doubt, that save in 
rare and extraordinary contingencies, the men may 
draw all needful clothing. 

As for the extras, they can and ought to pay for 
them. It is better to spend their money and preserve 
their self-respect. Disguise it as we may, if we con- 
tinue the present practice beyond the period of dire 
necessity, we introduce a system of alms-giving and 
alms-taking ; and no purity of motive, can avert the 



13 

degrading influence of such a system. I hold that 
the period of dire necessity has passed. 

In answer to inquiries upon this point, the surgeon 
of one of our regiments writes thus, under date of 
December 30th. " I would say, that in the matter 
of clothing for the soldiers, that need give our friends 
in Massachusetts no uneasiness, the supply furnished 
by the United States Government being amply suffi- 
cient; and in this regiment every thing has been 
brought forward with the utmost promptness, 
through the indefatigable exertions of our colonel, 
who devotes his entire military experience and 
natural capabilities, to promote the comfort of his 
command. I am certain where complaints are made 
from other regiments, (if there are any which reach 
you at home,) the prime cause must exist entirely 
in the supineness or ignorance of those to whom 
the welfare of the troops is entrusted." 

Another says, " The soldiers of this regiment can 
and do receive from the United States all clothing 
requisite for their comfort." 

Another, in answer to the question, " Do your 
soldiers need any more clothing than they can get 
in the regular way," says, categorically, "No." 

Another, in a letter dated January 31, 1861 — re- 
ceived while this is going through the press — says : 

" I am convinced that any thing more than this, [the regular gov- 
ernment supply of clothing,] coming to the soldier in the way of a 
free gift or charity, is a positive disadvantage to hirn. 



14 

" As with the civilian, the more the soldier is made to depend upon 
the fruit of his own labor and resources, the better soldier, the better 
man he becomes. By self-dependence, accompanied by the strict 
discipline of camp life, he is much more likely to learn the habits of 
economy, prudence, carefulness, temperance, sobriety, and secure 
cleanliness ; in short to acquire those habits that characterize the 
true soldier. "Who can estimate the value of such habits to the 
volunteer on his return to civil life ? How fruitful of good to the 
nation is example after such training ! The soldier never should 
have at one time, in his immediate possession, more clothing than 
what he wears, and what he can easily carry in his knapsack. Sup- 
pose he wears out more than the government allowance for the year, 
which I believe, with due care and economy, need not be ; far better 
that the soldier shall purchase any such needed extra, with his own 
earnings, than be supplied by charity ; on the principle that one values 
what he earns or produces, and consequently is more likely to make 
better use of it. Apply generally one single illustration. A soldier 
with three shirts will always have two dirty ones. With only two, he 
will improve the first opportunity of time and weather to wash, and 
consequently always have one clean at his hand. The same in 
regard to repairs, &c. Other points are involved in the possession 
of more clothing than the government allows, selling, pawning, 
gambling, throwing away, &c, according to the disposition and 
character ; it is sufficient to hint." 

I might quote from the letters of other surgeons 
to the same effect. 

No ! our men in the field do not lack food, or 
clothing, or money, but they do lack noble watch- 
words and inspiriting ideas, such as are worth fight- 
ing and dying for. 

The Southern soldier has what at least serves 
him as such ; for he believes, that he fights in 
defence of country, home, and rights ; and he strikes 
vehemently, and with a will. 

Our men, alas ! have no such ideas. The Union 



15 



is to most of them an abstraction, and not an inspir- 
ing watchword. The sad truth should be known 
— that our army has no conscious noble purpose ; 
and our soldiers generally have not much stomach 
for fight. 

Look at the opposing armies, and you will see 
two striking truths. First, the Northern men are 
superior in numbers, virtue, intelligence, bodily 
strength, and real pluck ; and yet on the whole 
they have been out-generalled and badly beaten. 
Second, the Northern army is better equipped, better 
clad, fed and lodged ; and is in a far more com- 
fortable condition, not only than the Southern army, 
but than any other in the world ; and yet if the 
pay were stopped in both, the Northern army would 
probably mutiny at once, or crumble rapidly ; while 
the Southern army would probably hold together for 
a long time, in some shape, if their cause seemed 
to demand it. 

The animating spirit of the Southern soldier is 
rather moral than pecuniary ; of the Northern soldier 
it is rather pecuniary than moral. 

Of course, moral here does not mean virtuous. 
Anger, hate, revenge, and the like, are among the 
forces which intensify the morale of the Southern 
army, and give to it the snap which is so lamentably 
lacking on our side. 

Intensify the morale of our army by higher pur- 
poses, by nobler motives, and you will see how much 



16 



stronger is a virtuous than a vicious cause, when 
men are made to feel that it is so ; and how much 
more hardy and plucky is a Northern than a Southern 
man. 

Our men are in a false position ; not strategically, 
but morally. The assertion, in all our mouths, that 
the war tvill, somehow, destroy slavery, is too abstract 
for them. Men do not go to the death on abstrac- 
tions. Put it in the concrete, that the war shall 
destroy slavery, and you give the soldier a conscious 
noble purpose — that of helping to emancipate four 
millions of men, women and children from cruel 
bondage. The danger to the Union, if no higher con- 
sideration, justifies such a policy. As for the power 
to enforce emancipation, we shall not know whether 
we have it, until we try. As for the right, if we 
may block up harbors, and destroy one source of 
our national pride, we may set men free, and destroy 
the only source of our national shame. 

Let then indignant and fiery words go forth 
from the White House, — " death to every resisting 
rebel! freedom to every friendly bondsman! honor 
and promotion to whoever brings to our side most 
helpers from the other." Let these be adopted at 
head-quarters, and repeated by generals, and colonels, 
and you will see an answering spirit in the ranks 
showing what Northern men are, and what they 
can do ; especially when they hear, (as they would,) 
the echoing cheers and blessings on the new policy, 



17 

from all the women, and all the male men of the 
North. 

Try to look a little at the matter, Madam, I pray 
you, from my point of view, if only for a moment. 

In wars carried on by regular armies moral consid- 
erations are of little weight ; and they become lighter 
as discipline rises. Hence the seemingly impious 
proverb that God is always on the side of the heaviest 
battalions. 

Men shrink instinctively from danger, and fear 
death. All wars and righting are carried on in view 
of this. But training enables the veteran to over- 
come fear, so that the commander may count almost 
as surely upon his men marching up to the cannon 
mouth, as though they were machines, let the cause in 
which they fight be what it may. If he has ten 
thousand men, and his enemy only eight, the chances 
in his favor are as ten to eight. 

Not so with contending peoples ; not so in irreg- 
ular campaigns ; not so with half disciplined armies. 
In these, the moral nature resumes its sway ; and that 
side is strongest, (almost irrespective of numbers,) on 
.which the passions are most thoroughly aroused. 

A people deeply excited, intensified (so to speak,) 
into disregard of danger and death by hot religious 
zeal, by fiery patriotism, or by any elevating passion, 
is unconquerable by any amount of numbers, by any 
length of persecution, by any thing, in short, save 
battalions made up of old callous military machines. 



18 



History is full of examples where people with 
nothing for defence save their passions, have success- 
fully resisted invaders who had every thing but 
passions. 

In our war the passions go for much ; the disci- 
pline as yet for comparatively little. 

The North and the South stand in hostile array. 
Their troops are about equally well, or rather equally 
ill disciplined. The Southern leaders, playing their 
old game of brag, by the help of men in buckram, 
and of paper battalions, display a long front, and a 
vast force. But history will probably show that the 
North has five-fold more men, ten-fold more material, 
and a hundred-fold more of warlike power and re- 
sources. And more even than all this, the North has 
one immense advantage, — an advantage which might 
have settled the war long ago, and spared much blood 
and treasure, to wit: that in the very midst of the 
enemy's country, there were at least four millions 
of people, (one-third of the whole population,) who, 
if not repelled by her, would have risen up and 
hailed her soldiers as friends and saviours, and utterly 
paralyzed and crippled the South. 

Now why is it that with this overwhelming force — 
with these immense advantages — the North has not 
already overrun and vanquished the South % 

Is it not partly, at least, because the heart of the 
army has not been impassioned by earnest and high 
motives, as it might have been'? 



19 

I have seen men so impassioned and intensified in 
Greece, in France, in Poland. I have been among 
our troops, and have failed to find the men so earnest 
for work, and fight, as to forget about pay, and to 
rise above the instinctive dread of danger. There is 
courage in them, doubtless, as there is heat in iron ; 
but it is latent as yet. 

The North, if let alone long enough by selfish 
powers abroad, and juggling politicians at home, 
will surely conquer. But, alas! she will conquer 
in virtue of being the richest and strongest, while my 
heart yearns to have her conquer in virtue of her 
cause being the best, and her men the bravest. 

Our cause will be the best, and our soldiers will 
be the bravest, when we write emancipation on 
our banners; and this war, forced upon us by our 
enemy, will be justified and sanctified by the noble 
end to which we shape it. 

In the vaunted days of chivalry, brave knights 
went up and down on the earth, seeking glory by 
fighting to redress some foul wrong, or to set free 
some innocent captive. One would think that 
chivalry had died out from the race, or from the 
land ; for here stand thousands of really brave officers, 
all girded for battle ; before them are foul wrongs to 
be redressed, and captives pining to be free. Would 
you not think that some swords would leap from their 
scabbards, and that, with orders, or without orders, 



20 



some young men would find or make opportunities 
for doing deeds worthy of Christian knights'? 

I am glad to have known one act of heroism ; — to 
have seen one who, leaving what is dearest behind, 
and taking life in hand, has gone boldly into the land 
of bondage where the captives are most numerous ; 
there, alone and unaided, to do such works of libera- 
tion as a cool head and brave heart may find to 
do. That one, however, is not of our race and 
color. 

It must be confessed that there is a lack of ardor 
and earnestness in our army for anti-slaver) work. 
Some explain it in one way, some in another. My 
way is this. Instinctive feelings work blindly, and 
impel men to action long before they are conscious 
of purposes. The fact of human slavery in the midst 
of freedom, bred this strife. But down at the very 
root of it the blind instincts of conservatism and of 
democracy, are fiercely contending. The strife would 
be short were it not for the prejudice of race, which 
strengthens 'conservatism, while it ties one hand of 
democracy. Most of our regular land and naval 
officers are conservative; so are many of our volun- 
teer officers ; and so is the great majority of the 
army of political office-holders, whose chiefs give the 
watch-words of the war ; but who give no such words 
as stir the hearts of the people, and of the soldiers. 

Such men have, and must have, though uncon- 
sciously, a sympathy with the aristocracy of the 



21 

South, and they hesitate to strike vehemently at its 
stronghold, and smash it in pieces. They have no 
enthusiasm for such work, and of course inspire 
none in the army. The task is reserved for democ- 
racy ; not such as we have had, — but for true 
democracy, when it shall strike in and save a per- 
ishing country. God grant it may strike in time to 
save it and the cause of human freedom, without 
which it is not worth saving. 

But to return to the matter of contributions. You 
ask, thirdly, if it has been right and necessary to 
ask public contributions for the aid of regimental and 
general hospitals, how long must we continue to call upon 
the people ? " In regard to this, I differ with most 
of my colleagues of the Commission, some of whom 
have better means perhaps of judging than I have. 

I was reluctant to have the Commission appeal to 
public charity, even for the hospitals, knowing that 
the Government ought to do, and wished to do all 
that was necessary for the soldiers ; but I saw that 
the system of supply could not be perfected rapidly 
enough to meet the exigency; and I yielded to the 
necessity of the case. In the circular however, 
which I sent out with the appeal of the Commis- 
sion to the Loyal Women of New England, I stated 
that, in my opinion, it would not be necessary to 
ask for aid longer than this winter. 

That appeal has been answered most nobly. Be- 
sides the vast amount of clothing and stores which 



22 



have gone from towns in New England, west and 
south of Boston, and besides that which has been sent 
by kindred associations, the Boston Branch Office of 
the Sanitary Commission alone, has forwarded more 
than a hundred thousand articles of good clothing. 
Among these were 33,939 pairs of socks, and 7,752 
shirts. The cash value of the whole being over 
$103,000. But the moral value is beyond estimate. 

There is not in all history an instance of more 
pious and patriotic offering laid upon the altar of 
country, by women of any land. The Roman women 
and maidens, in the hour of public danger, brought to 
the ^Ediles their trinkets and jewels, but ours bring 
the fruits of long days and nights of patient toil 
by their own hands. 

I do not think they should be urged to further 
contributions ; because the Government has the 
means, and has now the experience and the organ- 
ization necessary to provide for all the wants of the 
sick ; and it would be a misdirection of public 
charity to do what the Government can do, and 
ought to do, and will do. I never felt the force of 
the argument, that calling for these contributions 
would keep alive the patriotic fervor of our women. 
I knew that it was only necessary that the country 
and the cause should be worthy of the devotion of 
our women, in order to secure it. 

Besides, this chronic state of war is going to fur- 
nish an extra amount of charitable work to be done 



23 



at home. As for the expeditions about to depart, the 
government is abundantly able to provide every thing 
necessary, and to do it more cheaply, systematically, 
and effectually than we can do it. 

The testimony of many of our best army surgeons 
goes to show that no more contributions are needed, 
even for the sick. The Hospital funds, now generally 
organized, suffice to provide comforts, and even 
delicacies. 

As there are many of our women who do not 
understand this, let me explain it. When soldiers 
report themselves as sick and unfit for duty, they are 
put on the sick list, and if really ill, they are taken 
into the hospital. Of course they do not then want 
their ordinary rations, their bread and beef, but the 
value thereof is drawn in money, which goes to form 
a hospital fund ; and this is used to purchase such 
things as sick men need. By a liberal construction 
of the army regulations, it may be applied to purchase 
of clothes. 

Some of our regimental surgeons profited by this 
system at the outset, and those who were skilful 
administrators soon got together a fund sufficient for 
all wants. When for instance a man like Dr. Luther 
Bell directed the organization of Regimental or Brigade 
Hospitals, every thing necessary was provided ; but 
in other regiments there was lack and suffering for 
a long time. This explains the extraordinary dis- 
crepancy in the accounts which were sent home ; one 



24 



saying nothing was wanted ; another saying every 
thing was wanted, and both telling the truth. 

It is true there has been some difficulty in so 
administering the hospital fund as to carry out the 
benevolent purpose of the Government, but this has 
been mainly overcome. One of our best Massachusetts 
regimental surgeons, in answer to my question, 

"Would you advise that the people of Massachusetts should be 
called upon for further contributions, even for the sick and wounded, 
in regimental or general hospitals ? says : In answer to this question, 
as regards regimental hospitals, I must say, No. I apprehend that 
there is too much sympathy of a certain kind ; shall I call it morbid ? 
for the ' hard fare ' and destitute condition of our soldiers, I verily 
believe that a large proportion of them never 'fared' better in 
respect of clothing, food, money, ' comforts,' etc., or ' enjoyed them- 
selves more,' as civilians, if half so well. There are hardships and 
trials ; often, doubtless, of great severity, and which try souls as well 
as bodies ; but they are incidental to the condition, circumstances and 
life of the soldier, which no amount of contributions can prevent or 
alleviate. The answer to this query, however, as applying to regi- 
mental hospitals, is resolved in the answers to the two first. In 
regard to general hospitals, I am not particularly informed ; but it 
seems to me that under judicious management, the hospital fund 
ought to supply every needful comfort for the sick, while government 
provides amply, according to the supply table, in bed and bedding, and 
other material, with the necessary furniture, etc., for the establishment." 

Again he says : — 

" At present, and for the future, there should be no difficulty in 
securing the full benefit of the hospital for ' the benefit of the sick 
and wounded,' as it is managed by the brigade commissary, and not 
by the regimental quartermaster. The failure hitherto has arisen, I 
am disposed to think, from ignorance of duties, rather than from any 
design to deprive the hospital of it. So far as I am able to judge, 
the ' clothing ' for field hospitals, consisting of bed and bedding, as 
provided by government, is sufficient. More of the kind might 



25 



add temporally to comfort, but this extra, in case of a change of 
station, could not be transported ; and here I will say, that a great 
deal of material has been sent to us for hospital use, which was 
entirely unavailable ; and we have been under the necessity of send- 
ing it to some one of the stationary hospitals, where alone it could 
be of any essential service. Once more in regard to the hospital 
fund, there must be either ignorance, carelessness, neglect, or culpa- 
bility, where those sick soldiers are to be treated, if a hospital fund is 
not created ; and when created, if its money-value is not obtained 
and made available for their ' comfort.' " 

This surgeon's letter is so full of common sense, and 
really kind feeling, that I will quote another sentence 
or two, although not immediately connected with this 
question. He says: — 

" I most heartily desire that the volunteer service could be made 
to conform more nearly to that of the regular. This, I suppose, 
must be the work of time. But they ought to act upon the same 
basis now in every minute particular. In the regular service, there 
is taken from among the enlisted men, a tailor and shoemaker for 
each company, and a barber for a regiment ; these receive their 
regular pay as soldiers, and perform no other duties but the practice 
of their respective trades. For the service thus rendered, in repair 
of clothes and shoes, and shaving and cutting hair, a certain amount 
of compensation is paid by the soldier who receives it. This operates 
well for all concerned. It is a motive for the performance of the 
work, and for doing it well. It enables every soldier to practice 
economy, and to exercise care in the preservation of clothes and 
shoes. For want of this arrangement in the volunteer service, coupled 
with the idea of ample supply from the free gifts of the benevolent, 
there is much needless waste. In the regular service, the soldier, at 
the end of his term of enlistment, (five years,) generally finds, on 
final settlement of his accounts with the government, a considerable 
balance in his favor, in the item of clothing alone. Why cannot this 
obtain among the volunteers ? " 

The Commission, mainly through the zeal and 
eloquence of its able President, set on foot a move- 

4 



26 



ment by which the women of the North came 
earnestly and effectually to the aid of the Govern- 
ment, in its emergency, and eked out its scanty means 
to supply the wants of the sick and wounded in 
Hospitals. The Commission showed the want and 
the way to supply it. I think that the emergency 
has passed ; and that the Government can now do all 
that is needful for the soldiers better than the people 
can, so long as it is supplied with money. 

Bear in mind that the Sanitary Commission was 
not formed with the view of collecting contributions 
from the people, and applying them to the aid of 
the sick. It undertook that work in a time of press- 
ing necessity and has done it thoroughly and well. 

You know that the Commission has other and 
more important duties ; and that for the means of 
performing these it must depend upon the public. 
The Commissioners themselves receive no pay, and 
want none ; but they have to employ men who go 
about among the troops, and strive to prevent abuses 
of various kinds, to fight off disease and death, or 
to lessen their ravages ; and these men must be 
paid. This work of the Commission can only be 
carried on by contributions from the people until the 
Government shall take it up, and do it through its 
own organization. The mei chants of New York, 
Boston and Philadelphia have hitherto mainly sup- 
plied the means. If the women of your place would 
help in the woik, and would join with others, and 



27 

support in the field one of the zealous and able 
Inspectors of the Commission, they would do an 
important and blessed work. 

Finally, repeating that I do not speak for the 
Commission, I advise the loyal women not to send 
any more extras of any kind to soldiers in the field, 
and not to undertake any more work than they have 
now in hand, even for the hospitals. 

I know this advice will be unacceptable ; but I 
know how zealous, how unselfish, how untiring, is 
their patriotism, (would to God that of men were 
as much so,) and I know it will urge them to work 
for . their country in some way which is neither of 
doubtful value, nor injurious to more pressing calls 
of charity. 

If any have means to spare, they will strengthen 
the hands of the Commission more, as I think, by 
sending to the treasurer five dollars in cash, than by 
sending twenty-five dollars' worth of clothing. 

To those who continue to work, I commend the 
able and efficient organization at 22 Summer Street. 

Faithfully yours, 

S. G. HOWE. 



LIST OF CONTRIBUTIONS 

RECEIVED FROM VARIOUS SOCIETIES OF LOYAL WOMEN, 
AND FROM INDIVIDUALS, FOR THE USE OF THE 

REGIMENTAL AND GENERAL HOSPITALS 

OF THE 
AT THE 

BOSTON BRANCH OFFICE OF THE U. S. SANITARY COMMISSION. 



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Phippsburg, " 
Ph mouth, " 
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Portland, " 
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Pittsford, " 
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Quincy, Mass. 
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Randolph, " 
Reading, " 
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Royals ton, " 
Roxbury, " 
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Readfield, Me. 
Richmond, " 
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Winterport & Frankf't. 
Wiuthrop, Me. 
Winslow, " 
Wiseasset, " 
Wiecasset & Edgecomb, 
Wentworth, N. H. 
Wakefield, " 
Walpole, " 
Warren, " 
Weare, " 
West Boscawen, " 
West Lebanon, " 
Westmoreland, " 
West Plainfield, " 
Whitefleld, " 
Waterbury, Vt. 
Wells River, " 
West Berkshire and ( 
East Franklin, ( 


West Brattleboro', Vt. 
West Dover, " 

Windsor, " 

Whiting, " 
Woodstock, '' 
West Braintree, " 
Woodstock & Tuftsville 
West Addison, Vt. 
West Charlestown, " 
Yarmouth, Mass. 
Yarmouth, Me. 
Unknown, 



23 



RECAPITULATION 

Of Articles received from various Societies of Loyal Women, at the 
Boston Branch Office of the United States Sanitary Commission, up 
to February 1, 1862. 



ARTICLES. 


Number. 


Estimated value. 


Pillows, 


12,184 


$15,230 00 


Blankets, 








7.113 


14,226 00 


Quilts, . 








9,031 


13,546 50 


Socks, pairs, . 








34,138 


12.972 44 


Comforters, . 








5,100 


7,650 00 


Shirts, . 








7,754 


9,692 50 


Sheets, . 








8,728 


6,546 00 


Pillow-cases r . 








15,649 


3,912 25 


Drawers, 








4,951 


4,010 31 


Under-shirts, 








2,708 


2,031 00 


Dressing-gowns, 








1,452 


1,815 00 


Mittens, 








4,014 


1,435 32 


Wrappers, . 








1,544 


1,544 00 


Towels, 








11,353 


1,475 89 


Slippers, pairs, 








1,858 


929 00 


Han kerchiefs, 








3,525 


881 25 


Cushions, 








2,132 


810 16 


Bed-ticks, 








270 


270 00 


Pillow-ticks, . 








332 


126 16 


Hospital Stores, packages, 






321 


1,605 00 


Sundries, packages, 






288 


432 00 


Bandages and Lint, packages, 






507 


- 


Books, packages, . 






315 


- 


Pamphlets, "... 






328 


- 


Cash * 






_ 


916 50 


Cravats, .... 






182 


- 


Sacks, Bed Covers, Rugs, 2 each, 






6 


- 


Jackets, .... 






14 


- 


Pairs Wristlets, Scarfs, 33 each, 






66 


- 


Shawls, .... 






47 


- 


Coats, ..... 






30 


- 


Bolsters, .... 






32 


- 


Waistcoats, .... 






168 


- 


Caps, ..... 






220 


- 


Pairs Pants, .... 






44 


- 


Cloaks, Pairs Gaiters, 4 each, 






8 


- 


Table Cloths, 






9 


- 


Pairs Suspenders, 






5 


- 


Buffalo Robe, Bed Chair, Curtail 


l, Tippet, 


Over- 






coat, 1 each, 






5 


- 


Stools, Hats, 3 each, 






6 


- 


Aprons, .... 






13 


- 


Havelocks, Mattresses, 10 each, 






20 


- 


, 










$102,057 28 



179.43 received since table was made. 



24 



SPECIAL CONTRIBUTIONS. 



From Walpole, 

Not stated, . 

Biddeford, 
Mrs. S. M. Fitch. 
Holyoke. 
Not stated, . 
Rev. 6. Knox, 
Not stated, . 

Fitchburg, . 

Northfield, . 

Brookfield, . 
Saco, . 

Stoughton, . 

Not stated, . 



Shirley, 
Foxboro', 
North Reading, 
Walpole, 
Not stated, . 
East Boston, 
Not stated, . 



Charlestown, 



Greenfield, 
Not stated, 



Laconia, 

Not stated, . 

Tremont Street M. B 

Cambridge, 

Not stated, . 

New Ipswich, 

Woburn, 

Not stated, . 



Church 



2 barrels for Rev. F. N. Knapp. 

case " E Street Hospital, Washington. 

" " Rev. F. N. Knapp. 

" " 5th Maine. 

" " 10th Massachusetts. 

" " 10th Massachusetts, 

barrel " 22d Massachusetts. 

" " 10th Maine, 

case " 5th Maine, Col. Jackson. 

" " Mrs. C. B. Smith. 



15th Massachusetts. 

Miss Dix. 

5th Maine. 

9th Massachusetts. 

Colonel Wilson. 

3J and 4th Vermont. 

10th Maine. 

2d Massachusetts. 

4th Kansas, Leavenworth. 

Mrs. Calsb Smith. 

Columbia Hospital. 

Rev. F. Knapp. 

20th Massachusetts. 

California Regiment. 

11th Massachusetts. 



case 

barrel 

case 



cases 
case 



package ' 



" " Corpl. C. H. Pease,' Col. Lansing's Reg't- 

" " Richard Edgerly, 7th Maine. 

" " Geo. Stiles. 

" " T. A. Farr, Baltimore, 

case " Massachusetts Regiments. 

" " 1st and 11th Massachusetts. 

" " 15th Massachusetts. 

" " Massachusetts Regiments. 

" " 20th Massachusetts, 

cases " Western Virginia, 

case " Co. E, 2d Massachusetts, 

bbls. " 18th Massachusetts, 

box " Maine Regiments. 

" " 2d New Hampshire. 

" " Co. C, 5th Vermont. 

" " Mrs. Pomeroy. 

Doxes " 20th Massachusetts, C. W. Folsom. 

package " Professor Bache. 

box " 2d Massachusetts, Rev. E. H. Parker. 

" " 11th Massachusetts. 

" " 23d Massachusetts, L. H. Bartell. 

2 boxes " Miss M. Hyde, Baltimore. 

1 box " Lieutenant-Colonel Palfrey. 



25 



Not stated, 



Nantucket, 
Not stated, 



New Ipswich, 
Gilmauton, 
Not stated, 



South Danvers, 
M-r-^e^an, 
Boston, 
Not stated, 



|bbla 
box 



bale for 1st Massachusetts, Dr. Salter. 
" " 16th Massachusetts, Dr. Jewett. 

" " 31 Vermont, Capt. Howe. 

" " 14th Massachusetts, Co. D, Capt. Buxton' 

20th Massachusetts. 

Mrs. Pomeroy. 

Colonel Leonard. 

13th Massachusetts, Williameport. 

15th Massachusetts. 

11th Massachusetts, Capt. Stone. 

5th Vermont, Co. A. 

6tti Maine. 

Mrs Barker. 

2d Massachusetts. 

Mr. Cha .dler. 

Dr. W. Webster. 

3d Massachusetts. 

13th Massachusetts. 

11th Massachusetts. 

4th Maine. 



14th Massachusetts, Capt. Buxton. 

2d New York, Fred. Burns. 

22d Massachusetts, Capt. Thompson. 

6th Maine, Company C. 

5th New Himpshire, Lieut. Somes. 

20th Massachusetts, C. W. Folsom. 

2d Massachusetts, Chaplain. 

11th Massachusetts. 

10th Massachusetts, Col. Briggs. 

Mrs. Pomeroy. 

7th Maiue. 

5th Maine. 

7th Maine. 

27th Massachusetts, Col. Lee. 

4th Maiue. 

4tn Maine, William Work. 

7th Maine, Company G. 

9th Massachusetts, Co. II, Bliss Brockway 

20th Massachusetts. 

8th Maine. 

7th Massachusetts. 



boxes 
box 



packag 
box 



bale 
box 



Rev. P. Knapp. 

4th Maine. 

G. S. Chapman, U. S. Chasseurs. 

2d New Hampshire. 

5th Maine. 

Mrs. J. T. Fales, Washington. 

4th Maiue Regiment. 

Rev. F. N. Knapp. 

Charles Richards, 4th Vermont. 

D. L. Chandler, Kansas. 

Benj. E. Day, Co. G, 1st Massachusetts. 

U. S. Chasseurs. 

20th Massachusetts. 

Co. H, 6tti Vermont. 

Co E, 2a Vermont. 

Co. H, 2d Maiue, tor Horace Hanson. 

Lieut Hoovt-r, Co. II, 1st Miun. Keg't. 

Rev. Thomas Scully, 9th Massachusetts, 



26 



CASH RECEIVED. 





$10 00 




20 00 




30 00 


C. Fanny Sampson, . 


1 00 


M. Chandler, freight, . 


1 00 


South Charlestown, N. II., freight, 


1 00 


Allyn S. Kellogg, freight, 


2 00 


William Munroe, freight, 


50 00 


Jason Golding, freight, . . . . 


2 00 




30 00 


Yarmouth, Me., freight, 


3 75 


E. J. Coggeswell, Lexington, 


30 00 


E. N., Yarmouth, freight, 


1 00 


New Gloucester, freight, 


2 00 




1 00 


Milford, N. H., by E. A. Livermore, 


12 00 


Mrs. George P. Reed, 


62 00 


Employees of Fort Knox, Me., 


104 45 


Shawmut Society, Boston, freight, 


38 00 


Normal School, Mason Street, freight, 


5 00 


N. Leeds, freight, 


2 00 


Lancaster, N. H., freight, 


5 00 




1 00 


St. John, N. B., freight, 


1 00 




6 00 


A friend, in Wrentham, 


1 00 


Wm. Stecher, freight, 


25 


Scituate, freight, 


4 52 


M. J. Whipple, freight, . 


5 80 




4 00 




1 00 


Quincy P. 0. collection. 


4 00 


Orthodox Society, Groton, freight, 


2 00 


Sidney Bartlett, freight, 


8 70 


North Dennis, freight, . 


4 00 


Edward A. Walker, 


10 00 


Loomis Wells, freight, . 


1 50 




42 


T. W. Baldwin, freight, 


1 00 


Tyngsboro', freight. 


1 00 


Bedford, N. H.. freight, 


4 00 




1 50 


James N. Hall, freight, . 


1 17 


Nantucket, freight, 


1 00 


Greenlaud, N. H., freight, . 


2 00 


Limerick, Me., freight, . 


5 00 


Mrs. Ball, freight, .... 


2 05 


Marston's Mills, freight, 


1 00 


A. G. Stevens, Wentworth, freight, 


5 00 


W. B. Boynton, Shirley, freight, . 


50 


Dorchester, freight, 


2 00 


North Chelmsford, freight, . 


$2 00 



Wilmington, freight, 
H. S. Abbott, freight, . 
Ladies of Weston, . 
Temperance Association, Lexington 
Belgrade, Me., freight, . 
North Hanover, Mass., freight, 
Bloomfield, Vt., freight, 
North Penobscot, Me., freight, 
Dr. Allen, freight, . 
Manchester, N. H., freight, . 
L. C. Sherman, freight, . 
Unity, Me., freight, 

Freight, 

A friend, from Bridgewater, . 
Ladies of Norton, . 
Ladies of Elliott, freight, 
Natick, freight, 

Freight, 

Freight, 

" C," from Holliston, 

Hartford, Me., freight, . 

Bath, N. H., freight, . 

Ladies of Marion, Mass., freight, 

Rev. Dr. Sabin's Church, Templeton, 

Walpole, freight, . 

Brimfield, Mass., freight, 

Montague, freight, . 

Dixmont, Me., freight, . 

West Lebanon, Me., freight, . 

North Orange, Mass., freight, 

Newburyport, freight, . 

Royalston, freight, . 

Mignonette Society, Charlestown, ] 

Loriug, Boston, 

Ashland, Me., freight, . 

North Swanzey, freight, 

Dover and Foxcroft, freight, . 

Russell, freight, 

North Billerica, freight, 

Eastham, freight, . 

W 



Stamps, 

Collected by Mr. Murphy, in Fall 

and Conn, towns, . 
Sons of Temperance, Provincetown 
Strong, Me., freight, 
Wm. Munroe, 

Fairhaven Unitarian Society, 
Camden, Me., freight, . 
Westboro', .... 
Baud of Hope, 



The above has been duly accounted for to the General Treasurer of the 
Commission, as per his account. 

S. G. HOWE. 



M C 



